Leonard Cohen: I'm Your Man with Antony: DVD Cover
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Leonard Cohen: I'm Your Man Director: Lian Lunson Cast: Antony, Beth Orton, Jarvis Cocker, Julie Christensen

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  • DVD Release Date: 11/14/2006
  • Original Release: 2005
  • Rating: Rated PG13
  • Sales Rank: 7,053

Viewer Rating: (2 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Inspiration" See All

 
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  • Customer Reviews
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Scenes

Features

16x9 Widescreen; English 5.1 and 2.0 Dolby Digital Audio; Exclusive never-before-seen musical performances; A conversation with Leonard Cohen; Audio Commemtary with director Lian Lunson; English and Spanish subtitles; Closed captioned

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Scene Index

Disc #1 -- Leonard Cohen: I'm Your Man
1. A Great Tribute [3:23]
2. Jumping at the Chance [4:10]
3. Non Nostalgic [4:29]
4. The Real Masterpiece [3:14]
5. Everybody Knows [4:17]
6. The Traitor [7:35]
7. Song of Prayer [2:21]
8. Love Poems [4:25]
9. Beautiful Losers Preface [2:48]
10. Band of Poets [2:15]
11. Speaking the Language [6:00]
12. Hearing the Voice [6:27]
13. New York City Market [6:52]
14. All Stages [1:30]
15. Suzanne's Song [4:35]
16. Death of a Ladies' Man [1:49]
17. Can't Forget [3:21]
18. The Way [10:10]
19. Eclectic Ensemble [3:04]
20. Halleluiah [5:02]
21. Noble Warrior [2:39]
22. Tower of Song [6:52]
23. Those Days Are Gone [1:09]
24. Swan Song [4:17]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

By turns a concert film and a biographal portrait, I’m Your Man attempts to capture the elusive essence of poet and songwriter Leonard Cohen. Cohen’s music is represented by various artists performing at a tribute organized by the innovative producer Hal Wilner, while the Canadian wordsmith slips in and out of the narrative as a talking head, discussing the vagaries of his eventful life. The consistent beauty and passion of the performances reflect the admiration felt by a disparate assembly of singers that includes Nick Cave, Rufus and Martha Wainwright, Kate and Anna McGarrigle, Jarvis Cocker from the Brit-pop band Pulp, New York cult figure Anthony, and neo-folkers Teddy Thompson and Beth Orton. Highlights include Cave’s mordant reading of “I’m Your Man,” Martha Wainwright’s chilling “The Traitor,” Thompson’s shyly romantic “Tonight Will Be Fine,” Rufus’s campily tangoed “Everybody Knows,” and a heartbreaking “If It Be Your Will” by the androgynous-voiced Antony. Woven throughout are Cohen’s own quiet, penetrating reflections and observations on a life that has encompassed la vie de bohème in Montreal, '60s revelry at the Chelsea Hotel, world fame as a singer-songwriter, and extended studies at a Buddhist retreat. When the master finally sings a closing “Tower of Song” -- in a studio performance supportedd by an adoring U2 -- the payoff is more than worth the anticipation. Steve Futterman, Barnes & Noble

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Customer Reviews

  • Viewer Rating:
  • Ratings: 2Reviews: 2

Stroll down memory laneby Anonymous

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October 18, 2009: Reminded me of the past & the effect Leonard Cohen had on the time period.

Always leave them wanting moreby edvardjr

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April 02, 2009: Sometimes I think Leonard Cohen is the most underappreciated musician in the last hundred years because no one I know has ever heard of the man. Then I see something like this movie, that reminds that there are people out there with a great appreciation of this phenomenal musical talent. This documentary gathers a few famous faces and a number of musicians I've never heard of (lots of Canadians maybe?) and films a concert put on in tribute to the music of Cohen. It's ALL good. You might not find all your favorite songs performed, but a great many of them, and all of them are done with incredible love and style. However, I've never quite understood the concert documentary. Why watch the filmed concert when you can play the CD as much as you like when you're in your car or when you're working? Of course the concert is only half of the movie. The other half, interspersed through the film, is a candid interview with Mr. Cohen and the artists discussing his genius. The interviews with Cohen are incredibly insightful and eye-opening for anyone interested in his music. The only flaw is that these interviews are so short. Why not make the WHOLE movie the interview portion, a filmed biography of the man, providing his music in the background as soundtrack? So what we've got feels like two half-documentaries, half a concert and half an interview. For what it is, it's wonderful, I just wish it were more.

I Also Recommend: The Essential Leonard Cohen, No Direction Home - Bob Dylan.